Publication | Open Access
To Match or Not to Match in Epidemiological Studies—Same Outcome but Less Power
84
Citations
13
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineQuality Of LifeIbs PatientsHealth OutcomeEpidemiologic ResearchHealth StudiesSocial Determinants Of HealthEpidemiological Studies—same OutcomeSocial HealthRandomized Controlled TrialPatient-reported OutcomeEpidemiologic MethodMatching ProcedurePublic HealthEpidemiological PrincipleRetrospective Cohort StudyHealth SciencesControl GroupEpidemiological OutcomeOutcomes ResearchLess PowerEpidemiologyTime-varying ConfoundingMedicine
This study aimed to analyze the possible resemblance or difference in outcome in a case-control study of quality of life for IBS patients compared to controls free from the disease, when a matching procedure for age and sex was applied for the control group compared to when all participating subjects were included in the control group. The main result was that almost the same and identical results were found irrespective of whether matching or not matching was applied in this epidemiological case-control study. The matching procedure however, slightly diminished the statistical power of the results.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1